Constructing a Hybrid Windshield
Have you ever driven behind a construction vehicle, clenching the wheel and hoping that rocks and debris don’t fly up in front of your car and shatter your windshield? Well, you can’t always control what type of vehicle you’re stuck behind, but a windshield containing Corning® Gorilla® Glass can help take the worry off significant damage.
In December 2015, Corning and Ford announced Gorilla Glass for Automotive (GGfA) - a thin, lightweight, optically advantaged solution for automotive windshields that significantly reduces risk of breakage due to impact. GGfA offers many of the benefits Gorilla Glass has provided owners of mobile devices as the preferred cover glass material since its introduction in 2007.
Like traditional car windshields, Gorilla Glass for Automotive is composed of three layers. Traditional car windshields are made from two layers of soda lime glass sandwiching a PVB binding agent. This is how windshields have been made since Henry Ford introduced the layering technique in 1923.
After nearly a century, Corning evolved this multilayer approach, using Gorilla for Automotive to add additional value to the typical three-layer construct.
The innovative design replaces the windshield’s inner layer of soda-lime glass with chemically strengthened alumino-silicate Gorilla Glass laminate. An advanced noise-absorbing thermoplastic (APVB, Acoustic PVB) interlayer is then sandwiched between the Gorilla Glass laminate and soda-lime glass outer layer.
Martin Curran, chief innovation officer and executive vice president of Corning Incorporated, noted the value of Corning’s Gorilla Glass hybrid windshield construct, stating,
“The highest tensile force is on the surface of the inner glass. As a result, the inherent strength of Gorilla for Automotive is best suited as the inner layer of the windshield to reduce the likelihood of laminate breakage and the risk of glass particles penetrating the inside of the vehicle…This recommendation is confirmed by OEM interest and test results.”
The three-layer Gorilla Glass hybrid creates a tougher windshield, which helps withstand breakage and prevents hazardous glass shards.